I know most people are watching the Oscars tonight but we
are not really a TV family. We cannot
exist without high speed internet, Netflix, Hulu, PS3, Xbox and of course of all
of our books.
*Photo of Boone Library
*Photo of Boone Library
Kids Books (Harry
Potter & Percy Jackson)
We (me and my two kiddos) just finished the first five
Harry Potter books. We have moved on to
Percy Jackson because of length and dark material in HP is just too much at
this point. I am okay with discussing
death with my little ones but monsters, teenage angst and institutional
oppression is a little more difficult to explain at bedtime to my 5 and soon to
be 7 year old.
Percy Jackson is fun, first person and easier to read so
that Nara (7) can read the first page aloud each night. I am still lamenting that I have not found a
book with a strong enough heroine that I want to read it to my kids. It makes me want to write a kids book that is
a girl with super power: that is a cross between Buffy, Zoe, and Hermione and is kicking
some kind of monster butt.
Adult Books (I heart
Mercy Thompson)
Even titling this section “adult books” seems a little
sketchy when I write the words but we all need guilty pleasure entertainment. For a while I was avidly following the “VaginalFantasy” reading vlog on Google plus with Felicia Day but lately I have been
too busy to keep up. I was also not
super happy with the book selection and deviated slightly. When I start a book I finish it just based on
principle even if its end up being total crap.
I must admit I like a good balance of fantasy and a little
bit of romance/borderline raunchy. There
is a fantasy romance continuum with Anita Blake on one end of the spectrum and
Harry Potter on the other: I usually
fall somewhere in the middle but end up reading everything people recommend or
lend. This month I cannot wait for the
new Mercy Thompson novel to reveal what is going on in the world of my favorite
shape-shifting mechanic who married into a werewolf pack.
Pedagogy and Professional books (Teaching Naked)
I am reading two books currently that relate to teaching in
Higher Education: One is Teaching Naked
and the other is What the Best College
Teachers Do. Both titles provide
practical thoughts on how to improve my teaching practice. Later this week I am attending a symposium
where Jose Antonio Bowen is the keynote speaker so I am excited to finish the
last two chapter of Teaching Naked,
but probably won’t get to it until I am on the train on the way there. Of course my favorite chapter so far is about
“Designing College Courses more like a Video Game.”
What the Best College
Teachers Do has been full of surprises like the best teachers on specific
subjects are not always those with the longest list of publications (Chapter
2). I like that this book makes
communication a key element of what good teachers do. Communication and teaching is an inclusive
conversation not a solo performance (p. 119).
I know many of you are looking forward to taking in fancy Oscar
gowns and listening to moving speeches.
I am getting ready to enter the fantasy of greek mythology followed by a
little grading and a pedagogical chaser.